How can inflation be good for you?

So, the governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, is filling his fountain pen, and looking for a stamp.

Now that inflation has fallen to 0.5% on the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) measure, he's got to write a letter to the chancellor, explaining why inflation has missed the Bank's target of 2% by more than one percentage point.

But why on earth should he be writing to George Osborne to apologise, when low inflation looks so attractive?

For example, falling oil prices will probably mean that the average British motorist will save around £140 this year. What he or she doesn't spend on petrol - perhaps £4bn in total - is likely to be spent elsewhere, so boosting the economy in other ways.

So if falling prices are good for individuals and the economy, how can inflation also be beneficial?

How does inflation stimulate the economy?
In the example of falling oil prices, the motorist probably doesn't have much choice as to whether to buy petrol or not. But imagine if the price of the car itself were to start falling. Instead of buying yourself a new car this year, why not buy it next year, when it might be hundreds of pounds cheaper? A little inflation encourages you to buy sooner - and that boosts economic growth.
Why should borrowers love inflation?
Anyone with a mortgage or a loan benefits from inflation, as it has the effect of eroding debt. In the 1960s my father bought a house for £11,000. But with inflation peaking at around 13% in the late 70s, his wages were rising fast too - meaning the mortgage repayments were taking an ever smaller share of his income. By contrast, deflation - or falling prices - increases the real value of debts. Not a good place to be.


What effect does inflation have on wages?
Rising prices make it easier for companies to put up wages. They also give employers the flexibility not to increase wages by as much as inflation, but still offer their staff some sort of rise. In a world of zero inflation some companies might be forced to cut wages.

That would not be good for morale, recruitment or productivity. For most of the last five years inflation has been running ahead of wage rises, but thanks to inflation, wages have also been rising, if only in nominal terms.


Why does the government like inflation?
debt
The government has a huge debt, in the shape of a £90bn deficit. It would dearly love to see that eroded by inflation, which in turn would depend on its own income rising. And as long as there's a good dose of inflation in the system, tax revenue should go up, even if the economy is stagnant.

And there's another reason. In April 2013, the rise in most working age benefits was capped at 1%. If inflation stays below that level for long, that limit will begin to look more like a giveaway than a cap.

line break But why is too much inflation bad?
When inflation is too high of course, it is not good for the economy or individuals. Inflation will always reduce the value of money, unless interest rates are higher than inflation. Indeed if inflation falls below 0.5% in the UK, savers will actually get a positive return on their money, and they will be less inclined to spend it.

High inflation - as Gordon Brown used to remind us when he was chancellor - is also a cause of boom and bust in the economy. It therefore produces low growth and higher unemployment.

If inflation in the UK exceeds that of other countries, it can also erode competitiveness.

So what inflation rate is good?
growth
Most central banks favour an inflation target that is in the region of 2% to 2.5%. The Bank of England's target of 2% under the CPI measure is fairly typical. Some economists argue there should be a higher target in times of recession, such as 3%. This can promote higher growth, by keeping interest rates lower for longer.

But whatever the precise level, most do agree that a little dose of inflation is absolutely essential.

"The most important thing to remember is that inflation is not an act of God, that inflation is not a catastrophe of the elements or a disease that comes like the plague," said the Austrian philosopher and economist Ludwig von Mises.

"Inflation is a policy."

RBA snapshot of economy


Factors that Affect the Value of the US Dollar

Would you believe something as mundane as a rainstorm in New England can affect the value of the Dollar? It’s true. The US Dollar is subject to numerous influences, from politics to Walmart, and everything in between. The following list contains 50 factors that affect the value of the US dollar, both big and small.

Balance of trade and investment

The balance of trade and investment is often cited by analysts as the most important influence on the value of the dollar, with good reason. The balance of trade, related to the current account, represents the difference between what the US exports and imports in terms of goods and services.

The balance of investment, or financial account, represents the difference in exports and imports of capital. If exports exceed imports, in either the current account or financial account, it is called a surplus. When imports exceed exports, on the other hand, it is referred to as a deficit. The following points elaborate on how the current account and financial account affect the USD.

Balance of trade: Otherwise known as the current account balance, the trade balance is equal to the difference between imports and exports. The US has been running a trade deficit with the rest of the world for most of recent memory. At $2 billion a day and growing, the trade deficit is making foreign investors increasingly nervous and can affect the dollar significantly.
Falling prices on foreign goods: When the prices of foreign goods decrease, they become more attractive to American consumers, creating a larger trade deficit. Conversely, a rise in the prices of foreign goods, through natural price inflation or because or increased demand, can make American goods look more attractive and help to narrow the trade deficit. This also supports American industry and the economy. All of this serves to help the dollar.
Balance of investment: When the US imports more than it exports, it means investors from other countries have to buy US assets to keep the dollar from falling. Simply stated, if the US imports more than it exports, foreign investors must buy dollar-denominated assets like bonds or treasury securities in order to offset the difference.
Politics

Government policies often have a great impact on the value of the dollar. Savvy foreign investors know to keep an eye on the state of our political affairs, especially as they impact the strength of our economy and our ability to service the national debt.

Budget deficit and national debt: The US government’s budget can affect the dollar’s value, too. If foreign investors see that the government is spending more money than it currently has, they know that it will be forced to borrow from future generations as well as from the private sector from foreign entities. The US national debt currently stands at $9 trillion and is growing by over $1 billion per day.
Little or no default on debt: When the government keeps a good credit history, risk goes down and the dollar goes up. Fortunately, the US is currently considered the world’s most credit-worthy borrower, which in large part explains why the dollar has remained strong.
President’s popularity: Often, the popularity of the US president is tied to the value of the dollar. Experts debate whether or not the two have an effect on each other, but reports point out that "international investors like to a see a strong U.S. executive because they prefer a single national decider setting the agenda and fear a fractious, parochial Congress."
Terrorist attacks and war: Attacks damage consumer and business confidence, hampering economic growth. They also increase the likelihood of war, and consequently, a budget deficit to support associated spending. An ongoing war can quickly become expensive. It makes investors nervous because it will likely increase our national debt, and slightly increase the risk of default.
Geopolitical events: Anything that could be seen as precipitating a conflict or foreign involvement can affect the dollar negatively. The value isn’t necessarily about what it’s actually worth, but rather what investors think it’s worth. Perception is often reality in the forex markets.
Consistent policies: If investors feel that things will largely stay the same, they’ll flock to the dollar because it’s a safe bet. This increases demand and thus, the value of the dollar. Remember, unlike many other investment vehicles, forex is hurt by volatility. This is especially true with regard to financial policy: if investors believe US policy is on the right track, they’ll want to put money in dollar-denominated investments. Conversely, investors can lose faith in an economy that can change with new policies, so they’ll see the dollar as less of a safe bet.
Government expansion: New departments and increased government functions cost money, too. Like other government expenses, expanding or creating new groups like the TSA and the Department of Homeland Security can lower the dollar’s value due to their opportunity cost against other expenses in the budget.
Elections: Confidence in or wariness of a new administration can cause investors to flock to or flee from the dollar. Also, as new members of Congress are elected, new laws are passed which can affect our economy. Foreign investors may react positively or negatively to these changes, affecting the dollar’s value.
Tax cuts for consumers: Tax cuts for consumers fuel spending, which can improve the economy of our country as well as others, like China. This can be good for the dollar as long as it does not deepen the trade deficit or our budget deficit. On the other hand, increases in taxes discourage personal spending, but they help with government spending and debt. This can slow the economy, but at the same time lessen our deficits.
Other countries

Political impact on the dollar does not originate entirely from the US; it can come from all over the world. Trade, conflict, consumption, and other issues can affect the dollar from outside our country.

Turmoil in other countries: When other countries are in a state of conflict, their respective currencies may be perceived as unstable. In this case, investors may flock to the dollar because it is considered a safer bet.
Stability in other countries: On the other hand, if other countries are consistent in their policy-making as well as politically and economically stable, the dollar may weaken because investors have more confidence in these alternative currencies. They’ll see them as less risky and diversify into non-dollar denominated assets.
A change in foreign reserves: The USD benefits strongly from being the world’s reserve currency. Most central banks hold more dollars than any other currency, but the dollar faces problems when they decide to diversify their currency investments. This could mean that they sell dollars, or simply just stop buying more. This is especially damaging when a large purchaser like China decides to stop adding to its foreign reserves.
A strengthening Euro: The dollar faces competition from the rising Euro. It’s an attractive alternative to the dollar when investors choose to diversify or if the dollar becomes unstable.
Acceptance of oil in dollars: As long as the majority of world oil contracts are settled in USD, other countries have to use the currency. This increases demand for the dollar and therefore, its value. Additionally, most oil exporters hold a significant portion of their oil proceeds in dollars.
Strong foreign economies: If other countries’ economies are booming, the dollar may fall because it will become a relatively less attractive place to invest.
Entitlements

As a significant government expense, entitlement programs can have a large impact on the way investors view the value of the dollar. If it looks like the US is letting things get out of hand, these programs can shake the confidence of investors. These are a few of the programs and issues that affect the dollar.

Social Security: It’s apparent to Americans and foreigners alike that Social Security is a sinking ship that will only get worse with time. Clearly, this causes investors to lose faith in the US money management system, but when the US works to reform the program, some of this confidence is restored and the dollar can benefit.
Medicare/Medicaid: Like other costly entitlements, government sponsored-health care programs are becoming difficult to maintain, which could drive investors to seek countries with more stable budgets.
Economic theory

The laws of supply and demand are ever-present in economics, and currency trading offers a prime example of this law in action. These are a few of the effects that supply and demand exert on the value of the dollar.

Demand for dollars: This factor can be tied to most others, but it can function on its own as well. For example, "if French investors saw an opportunity in the U.S., they might be willing to pay more francs in order to get dollars to invest in the U.S." More francs per dollar means the dollar’s value has risen.
Demand for physical currency outside the US: Some countries accept dollars as a physical currency, so they need a supply. For example, "large international demand for US currency bills in the 1990s gave the US government a unique and inexpensive-to-produce export." Although it requires supplying more currency, this is a factor that can strengthen the dollar’s value.
Increase in money supply: With every new dollar printed, each one is valued less than before. The more dollars there are in circulation, the less the currency is valued because the supply has been increased. In practice, this usually causes inflation, which directly eats into the value of the dollar. While this would seem difficult to measure, the Federal Reserve periodically publishes M2 and M3 data reports on the US money supply.
Interest rates

Just like consumers might shop around for the highest-yielding savings account, foreign investors look for the best deal in currencies. Here’s how interest rates affect the dollar’s value.

Rise in interest rates: Higher interest rates mean more profit for investors, so a US rate hike will generally strengthen the dollar. In the long-term, however, the law of interest rate parity dictates that currency valuations and interest rates should move in opposite directions. The opposite also holds true. If the Fed lowers interest rates, investors might drop the dollar in the short-term because there’s not enough profit in it.
Attractive interest rates in other countries: Regardless of whether US interest rates are rising or falling, the dollar’s value also depends on how US interest rates stack up to those of other countries. If US rates are lower, investors may switch to different currencies that can offer a better return. On the other hand, if other currencies have unattractive interest rates, that allows us to entice investors with a better deal.
News about interest rates: Investors like to be ahead of the game, so if news of an interest rate hike or fall is released, the dollar may fluctuate in response to the coming inflow or outflow of investments that are expected to happen in the future.
American consumers

American consumers have the most at stake in the dollar’s value. A fall in the dollar makes consumers’ money worth comparatively less, putting a squeeze on the budgets of the Average Joe. Yet there are several things that consumers do that serve to drive down the buying power the dollar. Here’s how Americans do it.

Consumer savings: Americans aren’t big on savings. In fact, most families have a negative net worth. While this has contributed to a strong economy in the short-term, it means the US is ill equipped to support the economy in the long-term. Additionally, negative domestic savings drives us to import foreign savings, which harms the dollar.
Gas prices: Rising gas prices leave consumers with less money to spend elsewhere, or worse, drive them to borrow money to keep up their standard of living.
The Walmart/Honda factor: When Americans buy foreign goods like items at Walmart or Honda cars, we contribute to an economy that supports more imports than exports. This creates a trade deficit that weakens the dollar.
Slow spending: Just as too much spending can hurt the dollar, too little spending can have a negative effect as well. Analysts report that when we hit a slow shopping season, "the Fed might see that as a sign of consumer fatigue and choose to cut rates in an attempt to stimulate growth. That could hurt the dollar."
Housing

Recently, we’ve seen how a housing boom and subsequent bust can cause problems for families, investors and lenders in the form of defaulted loans and drops in the value of homes. These same issues cause problems for the dollar, too.

Slow housing market: A slow housing market creates a domino effect. Sellers are forced to lower their asking prices, which creates a decline in household spending and results in slowed economy growth, all of which hurts the dollar.
Strong housing market: A growing, steady housing market builds the equity and net worth of home owners, spurring spending and growing our economy. This supports the dollar.
Overinflated housing market: This kind of housing market results in a fall of equity and personal wealth, but it doesn’t stop there; it makes the dollar fall as well, as the effect of declining home prices ripples throughout the economy.
Industry and economic indicators

American industry both affects and reacts to the value of the dollar. When the dollar falls, our goods become cheaper and more attractive. However, when we have a strong dollar, our industries have to compete harder against cheaper foreign labor and goods.

Low growth in manufacturing: Manufacturing levels serve as an indicator for the health of the US economy. An industry slowdown means a general slowing in the economy and can cause investors to become wary of the dollar.
Strong manufacturing growth: Conversely, strong manufacturing growth can indicate that the economy is picking up, creating a more attractive dollar.
Outsourcing: Outsourcing creates a trade deficit and causes US employment to suffer, resulting in a fall of the dollar. However, outsourcing also makes US companies more profitable and more attractive targets for foreign investment.
Entrepreneurship: Entrepreneurship creates attractive investment opportunities for foreign investors, supporting a stronger dollar.
Employment growth: Like manufacturing growth, employment growth is a good indicator for the overall health of the economy. Positive employment growth will attract more investors and create a stronger dollar. Unnaturally high unemployment causes the dollar to drop because the government loses tax revenue that could help with the deficit. It also takes consumer purchasing power away, which causes the economy to suffer.
Wage data: Higher or lower wages can either attract or scare off investors, creating a fluctuation in the dollar’s value.
US capital markets

US stocks, bonds, and other investments can be appealing no matter where you are in the world. The performance of US capital markets can either attract or reduce foreign investment, which directly affects the dollar.

Bear markets: Falling values create investment losses that shake investor confidence and cause them to diversify or liquidate their portfolios, resulting in a loss for the dollar if the diversification involves an exodus from dollar-denominated assets.
Bull markets: Strong market values have the opposite effect, creating profits that attract new investors and encourage current investors to put more money into dollar-denominated assets. A booming market can attract investors, but it can also cause the dollar to fall when it corrects itself and investors pull out.
Accounting scandals: Accounting scandals like Enron can burn investors and cause foreign investment in US stocks to fall.
Economy

The current performance of the US economy is synonymous with the financial health of our nation. It signals to investors our ability to pay back debts as well as the profit level they may earn.

Economic growth and stability: In general, a strong economy will raise confidence, assuring foreign investors that they’ll earn a good profit on a stable investment. Economic growth is even better, attracting investors who hope that their investment will grow, too. A boom in the economy can cause an investment rush that results in a temporary overvalue of the market. This can lead to a dollar loss when it corrects itself in a slow of the economy.
Economic recession: What goes up must come down. A slowing economy hurts the dollar, causing investors to pull out for fear that their investment will lose value.
Outperforming other economies: Economic performance is all relative. If the US economy is stronger than others, investors may turn to the dollar as a safe bet.
Weather

Weather affects the agricultural industry, energy consumption, and local economies. Any change, for better or for worse, can create a ripple affect that impacts the economy as a whole and causes the dollar to fluctuate.

Unfavorable farming conditions: Unfavorable farming conditions can result in slow crops and force grocers to turn to other countries to satisfy US agricultural needs. This further opens up the trade deficit and weakens the dollar.
Unusually hot summers: An unusually hot summer can cause a rise in energy costs for both consumers and industries. This can create a strain on the economy and cause the dollar to fall. Just like an unusually hot summer can sink the dollar, an excessively cold winter can do the same thing. It can cause energy costs to rise, and since must of our energy is imported, the dollar may be adversely affected. Additionally, consumers will presumably have less disposable income to pour into other areas of the economy.
Natural disasters: Natural disasters like Hurricane Katrina create a strain on local economies as well as the local and federal government as we work to repair damage and spend money on relief and rebuilding. This can cause the dollar to struggle.
Inflation

Inflation directly eats into the value of the dollar. The law of purchasing power parity (PPP) holds that a nation’s currency and its general price levels should move in opposite directions.

Slow in inflation of foreign goods: A slow in inflation of foreign goods keeps prices of those goods steady, allowing American consumers to purchase the same amount or more of the same goods. This does not help to close the trade deficit and can weaken the dollar.
News about inflation: Of course, any news about possible inflation of the dollar or foreign goods can cause the foreign exchange market to react preemptively and fluctuate the dollar one way or another.

IF You Want To Be A Trader, 10 Things You Must Have

Trading is not all math, not just a system you plug into a chart, and not a path to easy money, you are going to earn it. If you do get lucky and make some quick and easy money you will give it back to its rightful owners eventually. Trading is a business that has to be ran in a professional way, every day. Trading is so challenging because it takes being good at many things at the same time to be a success. Why? Trading is a multidimensional sport.

Here is what you have to have to set the right foundation for success:

Work Ethic: You have to do a lot of work in back testing, researching and study of price action. We are talking hundreds and thousands of hours of work not a weekend with one book or a few charts. Usually have have to love the game of trading only passion can keep you working this hard long enough to break trhough to profitability.

Support from your spouse or partner: If your wife or husband does not believe in you and what you are doing that will become an obstacle that will likely not be overcome. You have to understand where they are coming from and ease their fears by not doing anything stupid like trying to trade for a living under capitalized or wit out a long term track record and a proven system. Also creating big financial losses will end their enthusiasm very quickly as well. You two have to be on the same team.

Capital: Without $30,000 as a part time stock trader or multiple six figures for an attempt to trade for a living you are simply under capitalized for active trading. Commissions and slippage will be a high percent of your capital. If you have only a few thousand dollars to trade with you would do better to do longer term trend trades and even hold investments as you add to and grow your capital.

Mind set: You have to embrace the risk and reward of trading real capital. The unknown can not stress you out and you can not let the uncertainty of short term results make you quit. A trader has to have an entrepreneurial mind set not one of an employee that expects a steady paycheck.

No Gambling: If you want to be a trader you have to remove the gambling instinct from yourself. You have to be like a casino measuring probabilities, odds, and possibilities instead of hoping, praying, and dreaming of the huge wins.

Time Table: You have to change your time table from get rich quick to steady returns and consistent growth of capital. The real path to big money is in the magic of compounding returns over multiple years.

Manage Risk: Good traders risk a little with the potential to make a lot, if you risk a lot in the hopes of making a fortune the odds are you will lose a lot over and over as other traders take your losses as part of their fortune.

Self Control:  A trader must be in control of their fear, greed, and ego at all times. These will all exist but how they are managed will make all the difference in success or failure.

Just Another Trade: Traders must trade at a position size that makes each individual trade just one of the next one hundred. No trade should turn the volume up your emotions so loud that you can’t follow a trading plan.

Long Term Results: Traders have to understand short term results can be random it is the faith in the long term results following a robust methodology that makes all the difference.  In the long term a traders edge will play out and lead to profitability. The trader has to plan on what draw downs are acceptable versus the returns they are looking for over the long term.

Key points why traders fail


1. Why are you trading and what do you want to achieve?
This is probably the most important question to ask yourself before stepping in the ring. Are you trading for a bit of beer money, to supplement your income, for full time income, because you’re out of a job and need an easy way to make money, you’re a gambler? You need to ask yourself why you want to trade and answer honestly as if you don’t then you’re on the road to ruin already.
The greater the need to trade the higher the pressure and the more likely you will lose. Just like competitive sports professionals, very few traders can deal with the pressures involved when livelihoods are on the line. If you can’t handle the pressure it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try but you need to trade at a level where the pressure is contained.
Don’t go throwing your life savings at trading. Start small and in amounts that have an emotional balance somewhere between “It means nothing” and “Oh shit I’ve lost the house”. Pick your comfortability level and stick with it until you have learnt and are confident enough to move it up the scale.
Trade for what you really want to achieve and set trades to those parameters. You don’t need 1000's of pips a week to have a more comfortable lifestyle. Compare yourself to the average rest of world not the billionaires. What do you need to pay your bills or make a material difference to your lifestyle? I bet in real terms in won’t be much. Be realistic.
2. Learn the ropes from top to bottom
Trading can seem the easiest thing in the world when you’re outside looking in but that first day you sit down with your money on the line can be daunting. Fundamentals, technical analysis, trading systems, you name it there’s something that will make you money. Rubbish no1! The only thing that will make you money is you and what goes on in your head. There is no get quick rich scheme, except for people who run get quick rich schemes.
Just like riding a bike you have to start somewhere and the easiest route to take is technical analysis as just a few key presses can have your trading screen pinpointing where you can make money.
Rubbish no2! TA does not tell you how to make money. It gives you points that can potentially lower the risk to any trade you wish to undertake. Our minds need something physical, a point to show that we’re not jumping in with our eyes closed. TA gives us that but it needs to be taken in context with other factors like fundamentals. Big technical levels close by are going to count for nothing if a tape bomb hits or if an indicator massively exceeds or misses expectations. Use TA by all means but don’t rely on it and don’t let your house rely on it either.
Fundamentals are all around us. You see it when your local bar puts the price of a pint up or when you go to fill your car up with fuel or when your electricity bill is higher. You don’t have to be a graduate in economics to understand the basics. Interest rates go up or down, inflation goes up or down, retail sales go up or down etc etc. Up or down, good or bad, it’s the constant in fundamentals. Get a feel for everyday life and your own situation and you get a grasp of fundamentals. Everyone should have some grasp of fundamentals. Would you go and get a massive mortgage at many times your income level if you knew interest rates were going to go up and cripple your finances? That’s understanding economic fundamentals and they apply just as much to trading as they do on a personal level.
Think of them like a tide. If you understand the direction then you understand what to look for as directional bias when trading. When fundamentals point a particular way they usually run that way for a long period of time. Don’t fight it.
Keep TA and the fundamentals simple and learn how they works before jumping into the heavy stuff. Once you’ve grasped the basics then look to expand if you see fit. Chances are you won’t need a pair of betwings or 15 years of M4 money supply knowledge to improve your profits as the simple stuff will serve you just fine. Find your direction with the fundies and use the tech to guide you.
3. Keep it simple and have a trading plan
Another big one that we need to staple on big and little signs all around our trading desks. You’ve done your analysis so now it’s time to trade but where do you get in and out and where is your pain threshold?
Not having a plan is one of the biggest reasons traders lose. Use TA and you have the points that can define the entry, exit and stop points. They all need to be taken into consideration. It’s no good doing analysis and plotting a tech entry point, then hoping for 1000 pips, then completely ignoring the tech in your way.  Learn to use it and highlight where your trade may or may not go as this gives you the opportunity to assess your trade and the ability to lock in your profits.
If you’re trading the fundamentals then gauge how far they have to run and what that means for the price when they stop.
Once you have a plan containing your entry, exit and loss points then you should be able to lose some of the emotion from the trade. If you are prepared you won’t be the deer in the headlights if your trade goes sour. You know your risk and you can mentally prepare for it.
4. Learning to take a punch
No one likes losing and no one likes losing money, but losing is what you will do. As above, if you can mentally plan for a loss then you can cope better when it happens. Take it on the chin, don’t dwell on it and move on. Definitely don’t jump straight back into the same trade because of bravado that you can get your money back or double down on a loss in the hope it comes back. Hope is not a strategy. Go back to the drawing board and start again on a new trade plan.
Remember, trading isn’t about getting right, it’s learning how to get it wrong less often
5. Discipline
Hopefully you’ve found the first four points very insightful and they’ve given you food for thought, and will see you trading accounts swell. They’ll get you nothing but pain if you don’t have the discipline to follow them though.
If you can’t follow 5 simple rules then you might as well take the cash you were going to put in your trading account and blow it all on a massive holiday or booze up. At least you’ll get some enjoyment from it. You won’t get any enjoyment in seeing your hard earned cash whittled away if you don’t have the discipline to manage your money and your trading account as best you can.
It’s not easy and discipline is one of the hardest principles to follow, even for the seasoned trader. There’s many factors that will draw you off the reservation and you will follow them like a lemming off a cliff. It’s how you let yourself go and how quick you can get back on track that will determine whether you survive.
With experience you can learn to go off the beaten path sometimes but that experience can take many years to develop. It’s easy to read about traders who have made millions and forget that often it took a lot of hard work to get to where they did. It’s very hard for most of us to stick rigidly to the simplest of things let alone something as important as this. Go back to the sports analogy and the principle is the same. The discipline a sports person follows is what separates them from the rest of us. That doesn’t mean we need that same level to compete in trading but we do need a higher level to get by. If you haven’t got it or can’t develop it then you need to go back to step one and ask yourself the question again.
To summarise
There’s many moving parts to the psychology of trading and we all stray from the path now and again. That’s fine as it’s the response to that straying that counts. Sometimes you have to to see how to do something wrong before you learn how to do it right. If you find you’ve slipped into bad habits then that is often an apt time to pull out the list of ‘do’s’ and ‘do nots’ and go back to the beginning and start again to get your mind re-focused.

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